| Project PlatInform |
| Wednesday, 23 December 2009 | |
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Project Brief Problem ![]() Never a great way to start your day ![]() Hey, it can't be that bad, right? ![]() Wrong ![]() Face it, New Yorkers are miserable ![]() I do not love NY ![]() this would be nice for a change Solution User Scenario ![]() PlatInform consists of 10 light bars built into the platform where each bar corresponds to each train car ![]() And there's you, waiting at the 42nd St station for a subway heading uptown ![]() When the train leaves the 34th St station, it sends data based on the level of occupancy within each car to the next station ![]() You see the lights on the platform light up and you move to one of them ![]() When the train arrives, you have an emptier train car waiting for you Some of you might be wondering what happens when there are too many people at a part of the platform that's lit up. Well, there are also sensors embedded in the platform so that when there are more people on the platform than there is space in the car, the green light on the platform turns off. Prototyping ![]() Stand here for an empty car ![]() 8am-9am Seats available
During prototyping, there were a few train riders that seemed skeptical about the signs on the platform, but a majority of them actually did follow the signs. Perhaps it was the novelty of a bright green sign on the ground that attracted them, but in hindsight, the second lady with the cane (at 0:30 in the video above) struck a chord with me. When I initially set out on this project, my main target audience were subway riders in general. I didn't really think about how PlatInform would affect the subgroups within that general pool of commuters, such as the elderly and the handicapped. Prototyping this project did two things for me 1) proved that PlatInform, for the most part, worked and 2) that there is a certain level of usefulness that this system provides based on whoever is using it. Moving on, how does all of this look once implemented in the NYC subway stations? The following are a few mockups showing PlatInform in action. ![]() A lady reading her paper without having to worry about a crowded train car ![]() People rushing to semi-empty cars at the 14th Street Union Square Station ![]() It's early in the morning and people have a choice to not have to deal with crowded subway cars Promotional Materials ![]() No one wants a lap dance while reading their paper ![]() Not even a pole dance ![]() Horizontal poster briefly explaining how PlatInform works Powered by !JoomlaComment 3.12 Copyright (C) 2007 Alain Georgette / Copyright (C) 2006 Frantisek Hliva. All rights reserved. |
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